CARLETONVILLE, South Africa - Some 3,000 South African gold miners were trapped almost two kilometres underground Wednesday when falling pipe damaged the elevator but the company began evacuating workers through a smaller shaft and estimated it would take 10 hours to bring them all out safely.
There were no injuries and no immediate danger to any of the workers in Harmony Gold Mining Co.'s Elandsrand Mine, company and union officials said.
Peter Bailey, health and safety chairman for the National Mineworkers Union, said the first 74 men reached the surface shortly after 1 a.m. local time Thursday.
"They are all doing well," he said.
Deon Boqwana, regional chairman for the union, said there was ventilation for the miners waiting below ground and officials were in contact with the men by a telephone line in the mine.
"They are still in good condition but are angry, hungry, frustrated and want to get out of there," Boqwana said.
He said the miners were about two kilometres below the surface in a mine that at some points is about a 2.5 kilometres deep. The mine is outside Carletonville, a town near Johannesburg.
The company said the pipes of a collapsed water column fell in the shaft that holds the big elevator that carries miners in and out. The pipe extensively damaged the elevator's steel framework and electrical feeder cables, the company said.
Boqwana said the smaller cage being used to bring miners out can hold about 75 miners at a time. He said it normally takes three minutes to reach the surface but would be slower because rescuers were being careful. He said the evacuation would take about 10 hours.
Bailey, the union health chairman, said the miners were "very afraid," hungry and thirsty after being underground for hours.
"Some of these mineworkers started duty on Tuesday evening. It is now Wednesday night and they are still underground," he said.
A spokesman for the union, Lesiba Seshoka, said the mine was not properly maintained.
"Our guys there tell us that they have raised concerns about the whole issue of maintenance of shafts with the mine (managers) but they have not been attended to," he said.
There was no immediate comment from the company on the issue.
Last year, 199 mineworkers died in accidents, mostly rock falls, the government Mine Health and Safety Council reported in September.
©The Canadian Press, 2007
3,000 miners trapped in South Africa Gold Mine
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TexasStooge wrote:The mines are not safe anymore nowadays.
I can't speak for the mines in Africa, but in the US they're safer than they ever have been. Between mechanization reducing the number of people required to work in a mine and improved safety procedures for those who are still working in them, mining deaths are way down from their historical levels.
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Re: 3,000 miners trapped in South Africa Gold Mine
I heard they were able to rescue 3000 of them but can only bring up 300 of them an hour.
The other 200 are further down.
The other 200 are further down.
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